Hello from Beijing.  Where are all the Olympic athletes?  Did I miss it?  Oh well.  It’s Friday question day.   What’s yours?
Damian J. Thomas wants to know:
Why  do TV series waste my time with retrospective episodes?  Some episodes  simply show parts of the same stuff I’ve already seen.   Was someone,  such as the head writer, on vacation that week?
Retrospectives  are a cheap way to fill out a season’s worth of shows.  They generally  do well in the ratings.  And networks promote the crap out of them.
One  of the most horrifying experiences in my life involves a retrospective.   I was taking an MRI (already a heart pounding endeavor).  Mirrors were  set up in the tube that allowed patients to watch a television.  So  there I was, claustrophobic, not allowed to move even an inch, for 45  minutes, forced to watch the NANNY retrospective.
Years ago I  pitched a sitcom pilot to NBC.   When it was time for questions one  network whiz asked (in a straight face yet): “What’s the first episode  of season seven?”   I picked my jaw off the floor and said, “The clip  show featuring all the classic moments from the first six years.”  I  wanted to add but didn’t: “What the fuck do you think is the first show  of season seven?  How the fuck would I know that?  Are you insane?”     They didn’t buy the show.
Retrospectives are great for writers.   They get royalties for any clips used from their episodes.   My partner  and I cleaned up on MASH and CHEERS.  I think on CHEERS they used  something like 25 of our episodes.  After that, anytime in the writing  room we were stuck on a story at CHEERS I would say, “Let’s just scrap  this and do another clip show!” 
We were there during the MASH  retrospective and although it was cheap to produce it required five  times the effort on our part to put it together.   For a month every  night after we finished our writing we drove to a production house in  Hollywood and screened episodes until midnight or 1 AM.   Then came the  impossible task of culling seven years of great highlights into one  expanded episode.
An additional problem is determining the format  for the clips.  There is the wraparound approach.  This can be real  dicey.  I remember one series got around this problem by having their  characters being robbed.  While tied up together in the kitchen, to pass  the time (as all bound families do) they started reminiscing.  “Hey,  remember the time you wrecked the car?”  And then they’d show the clip.    Smooooth.
Nowadays shows tend to steer away from that artful  device.   On CHEERS we took the cast out of character and put them on a  panel.  They answered a moderator’s questions and we used the clips to  support those answers.   Other shows use just strictly clips tied  together by graphics or voice-overs. 
One trend I’m noticing  lately – these retrospectives are appearing sooner and sooner.   It used  to be you wouldn’t even think of doing a clip show before 100 episodes.    Now it’s getting to where the clip show comes as a celebration of  getting picked up for the back nine.
Someday I’ll have to put  together a clip show of this blog.  Various sentences from different  posts.  Wait a minute.  I could say I’m doing that right NOW.  Yes,  welcome to my retrospective post.
From Jim:
Is  there an etiquette among scriptwriters, both inside and out of the  writers' room, of how to let your colleagues know that you don't get the  joke, or even worse that you get it but you think that it stinks? Or  does everyone else just quietly move on and let you work it out for  yourself? And is there a further etiquette for when you think that  you've just come up with the funniest line ever, all these other fools  want to move on but you refuse to give up so easily?
Each  showrunner is different of course, but I’ve always tried to be as  diplomatic I can when rejecting a pitch.  I’ll say stuff like, “Yeah, it’s getting there” and “it’s funny but I’m not sure it’s right.”   If you really shoot the writer down you run the risk he’ll clam up and  then he’s worthless to you.   On the other hand, I know showrunners who  rule strictly by fear.   You pitch something he doesn’t like and he’ll  take your head off.  You might say, don’t they realize they’re only  stifling creativity and shooting themselves in the foot?  And I would  say, yes, but they’re assholes.  I’m lucky.  I’ve worked for showrunners  who had their quirks and I wanted to kill them but I’ve never served  under one of these tyrants.
There was a showrunner who would say, “How the fuck is that funny?  Explain to me how anyone is going to laugh at that.”  Needless to say the writers’ testicles retreated so far up his body he needed tweezers to find them.
Comedy  writers need to develop a thick skin and often times showrunners are  under tremendous pressure so they may not be as gracious as you would  like.    But I’ve always felt one of the showrunner’s jobs was to create  a safe fun environment in the room so every writer could produce his  best.  To me it’s a complete win-win.
As for the second part of the question, this is more than etiquette.  This is pretty much a RULE.
If  you pitch a joke, even if you think it's the greatest joke ever  conceived, if it’s rejected the DROP IT.   It makes no difference if  you’re right.  The fastest way to get yourself fired from a show is to  belabor joke pitches.  You get one shot.  If it doesn’t go in then move  on.   Don’t pout, don’t bring it up a half hour later, don’t say “we’d be home by now if you went with my joke”.  And for godsakes, if the line that did go in didn’t work on the stage DO NOT say your joke would have killed.
Jose asks:
Hey Ken, where in LA do u think most first-year TV writers, and then show runners, tend live?
Wherever  they can find something reasonable.  And most recently, not underwater.   There’s an area of West Hollywood that’s unofficially kno
wn  as “First Stop L.A.”. It’s around Melrose and La Brea. There are older  apartments and small houses and duplexes. And lots of young single  people. The older single people (generally they go by the nickname “divorced”) hole up in the Oakwood Garden Apartments in the valley.  So avoid that.
New  Los Angeles arrivees also gravitate to the Silverlake district. It’s  kind of artsy and bohemian and if you don’t mind the fact that it can  also be a little dangerous you might consider roosting there.  Hey, I can see Silverlake from the Great Wall!
Burbank is another haven.  I’m sure some of my readers can suggest other neighborhoods for newbies.
From Paul Duca:
…And  speaking of "off the top of your head", is that how you do those play  by play voiceovers, or do you watch an actual game clip?
It  depends. I’ve done it both ways. Usually there is no picture but I have  to tailor the play-by-play to the screen because often a character will  react to something on the TV so I have to time the commentary to fit.  Most of the time I’ll be watching the scene while doing my spiel.
There  have been times when we do see the action on the TV and then it’s a  snap because I just call the play-by-play of what I see.
Sometimes  I’m asked not to use actual names or teams. That’s a little trickier.  It’s easy to make up names for the players (usually I just use members  of the crew) but it’s hard to give the score when you can’t identify the  teams. I’ll do something like “And the Good Guys lead 4-2.”   Yeah, I know... pretty lame.
My  favorite experience was for the show BROOKLYN BRIDGE. I got to call the  1955 World Series. I wonder if it’s too late to get a ring.
What’s your Friday question? Leave it in the comments section.  
Thứ Sáu, 20 tháng 2, 2015
Friday Questions
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